Other materials innovations continue
Qustom Dot described their InP materials created by a novel synthetic method, leveraging precursor selection to tune color. With a focus for on-chip, they certainly have their work cut out, as I am not familiar with an example of a non-Cd QD that exhibits sufficient stability for on-chip use.
With a focus on blue QDs, QNA is banking on the fact that nearly all displays and lighting technology today rely on blue photons. While the peak width looks very attractive (FWHM <20 nm) time will tell if these materials are good enough for dispalys.
UbiQD showed that QDs can be used to shift the color of sunlight to benefit plant growth, increasing crop yields by >10% in many pilot studies. It appears they are gaining traction in the cannabis industry, which I would imagine provides an excellent ROI to the growers, along with farmers growing other high-value crops. It’s also fun to imagine basically the same QD film that is in a TV being implemented across an entire greenhouse (with different QDs of course).
In summary, an excellent gathering of companies at TechBlick that we should all be keeping an eye on. The technical progress in quantum dot world never ceases to amaze me.